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Título
Oldest tools made of whale bone reveal past whale ecology and ancient human-seashore interactions
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Industroa ósea
Magdaleniense
Región francocantábrica
Cetáceos
Clasificación UNESCO
5505.01 Arqueología
5504.05 Prehistoria
Fecha de publicación
2025
Citación
ÁLVAREZ-FERNÁNDEZ, E., BOLADO DEL CASTILLO; R.; APARICIO, M. T.; CUETO, M.; GUTIÉRREZ, E.; HIERRO, J. A.; JORDÁ PARDO, J. F.; LLORENTE, L.; MARCHÁN-FERNÁNDEZ, A.; UZQUIANO, P. & CUBAS, M. (2025): A “Shell-midden” dated to the Middle Ages in Northern Spain: the Church of San Juan Bautista in Colindres. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 65: 105223. ISSN: 2352-409X https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2025.105223
Resumen
[EN] Reconstructing how prehistoric humans used the products obtained from
large cetaceans is challenging, but key to understand the history of early
human coastal adaptations. Here we report the multiproxy analysis (ZooMS,
radiocarbon, stable isotopes) of worked objects made of whale bone, and
unworked whale bone fragments, found at Upper Paleolithic sites (Magdalenian)
around the Bay of Biscay. Taxonomic identification using ZooMS reveals
at least five species of large whales, expanding the range of known taxa whose
products were utilized by humans in this period. Radiocarbon places the use of
whale products ca. 20–14 ka cal BP, with amaximum diffusion and diversity at
17.5–16 ka cal BP, making it the oldest evidence of whale-bone working to our
knowledge. δ13C and δ15N stable isotope values reflect taxon-specific differences
in foraging behavior. The diversity and chronology of these cetacean
populations attest to the richness of the marine ecosystem of the Bay of Biscay
in the late Paleolithic, broadening our understanding of coastal adaptations at
that time.
URI
ISSN
2352-409X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-59486-8
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